Cotton-cleaner



R. S. MUNGER.

COTTON CLEANER.

APPLICATION FILED SEPT. 4. 1911.

Patented Aug. 5, 1919.

R. S. MUNGER.

COTTON CLEANER. APPLICATlDN FILED SEPT. 4. I917.

Patented Aug. 5, 1919.

5 SHEETS-SHEET 2- rm! COLUMBIA PLANOOIAPH 00.. \vAsHlNo'l'flN- D. c.

R. S. MUNGER. comm CLEANER.

APPLICATION FILED SEPTZQ. t9! 7.

Patented Aug. 5, 1919.

5 sncns-suzn' 3.

O 0 O 44 I I? IIIHNIINIIW lli-II R. S. MUNGER.

COTTON CLEANER.

armcmou men SEPT. 4. m 1.

Patented Aug. 5, 1919.

5 SHEETS-SHEET 4 R. S. MUNGER.

COTTON CLEANER.

APPLICATION FILED SEPT. 4. I911.

1,311,907. Patented Aug. 5,1919.

5 SHEETS-SHEET 5- UNITED s AtrEs PATENT OFFICE.

ROBERT s. MUNGER, or BIBMINcHAM, ALAB A, iisslcnon 'ro CONTINENTAL GIN coMPANY, v A conrom'rIoN or DELAWARE.

' "cprroN-ctniru'nn.

Specification of Letterjs l atent.

Patented Aug. 5, 1919.

Application filed September 4, 1917. Serial No. 188,651.

To all whom it may concern.

Be it known that I, Ronnn'r S. MU oEn, a citizen of the United States of America, residing at Birmingham, in the county of Jefferson and State of Alabama, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Cotton-Cleaners, of which the following is a specification.

My present invention relates to an apparatus for cleaning cotton and is more especially adapted for use in combination with suction apparatus for feeding cotton to a gin or battery of gins.

A variety of mechanisms have heretofore been employed with varying degress of success to remove sticks, nails, rocks, sand and foreign matter from the cotton before it is fed to the gins, and in these mechanisms, heaters, spiked drums and toothed cylinders have been employed to pass the cotton over screens through which the heavy foreign matter therein was intended to fall and collect. in a hopper from which it was removed in any suitable manner. A careful study of the operation of these various cotton cleaning devices has ledmeto the conclusion that they fail principally for the reason that the cotton is notsufliciently opened up and the cotton locks separated before being passed over the screens responsive to the action of rotating spiked or toothed elements.

One very important object of my invention is to present the cotton to the cleaning agents in the condition in which it can be most effectively acted upon thereby. To this end I provide a spacious cotton opening chamber, containing a fast spinning beater, the blades of which receive the incoming mass of cotton near the bottom of the chanr her and throw it upwardly and laterally against the walls of the chamber which are substantially spaced from thebeater so that the cotton in its flight will have ai rli plef time and space in which to open up, is permits the cotton locks to become separated, and much of the foreign matter in the cot,- ton to be separated tlierefrom the cotton and foreign matter passing, responsive to a combined gravity and'suction feed, from the opening chamber to'thecleanin chamber in which aseries of rotating spiked or toothed elements receive the cotton l ocks pass them over a'sepai'ating screen, The freed dirt and trash separated frointhe cotton in the opening chamber will pass died on by the other cylinders.

I have also found that the efliciency of the apparatus can be materially increased by the manner in which air currents are employed to assist in the cleaning operation and to this end the suction system Is adapted to draw the cotton from the separating chamber directly against the first of a series of rotating toothed cylinders in the cleaner chamber. The result of this arrangement is that the principal portion of the air currents pass directly with the cotton to the screen under the first. toothed cylinder and leave the rest of the cleaner chamber practically free from down drafts that will prevent the lighter or clean cotton locks from floating through the cleaner chamber above the cylinders to the point of cotton discharge while the heavier or dirty cotton locks carrying foreign matter will be caught by the successive toothed cylinders and driven repeatedly over the screen in such manner as to clean it. a

I make provision for separating large sized pieces of wood, sticks and the like from the cotton, by grinding them up between the first toothed cylinder and a co-acting yieldable toothed breaker bar so arranged that they receive between them such pieces as they fall from the opening chamber. The tension on the breaker bar is such as to yield only to permit thepassage of articles which the co-acting heavy teeth on the breaker bar and first cylinder will not grind up into particles that will pass through the screen,

The air current which flows downwardly through the screen and its hopper and carries with it the dirt and foreign matter caught in the cleaner, is caused to pass through a dust separator so constructed as to separate such heavier foreign matter by centrifugal action from the air current in its passage therethrough. A vacuum feeder is employed to discharge the foreign matter from the bottom of the dust separator.

My invention has for its further objects various improvements designed to simplify and faciliif the handling, and to improve the operation of the cleaning apparatus; such, for instance, as inountin the concave screens under the several toot, cd cylinders on one bed which can be readily drawn out of the machine for cleaning or repair; the

provision of the hopper bottom of the cleanmy; chamber with a wall that'movsrble to permit the screen bed to be readfly adjusted and removed; the mechanism for adJllstmg and supporting the screen bed; the construction of the toothed cleaning cylinders; and the mechanism 'lor adjusting the valves which control the feed o'f'cottou to the'cleanin apparatus.

Iy invention also comprises the various novel constructions and arrangements of parts which are more articularly described and pointed out in to claims, and Winch are illustrated only in their preferred embodiment in the accompanying drawings which form a part of this specification, and in which Figure 1 is a vertical sectional "elevation through the cotton cleaning apparatus and also through the gin feeding apparatus, the solid line arrows indicating cotton and the dotted arrows indicating air currents;

Fig. :2 is a side elevation of the cleaning apparatus showing the screen bed withdrawn for inspection or repair.

Fig. 3 is a detail view of the valve operating mechanism utilized to admit the cotton to or divert it from the cleaning appalatus.

Fig. 4 is the reverse side eievation of Fig. 2, the screen bed being in operating position in this View.

Fig. 5 is a sectional view through the B a-pirating chamber taken on the line 55 of ig. 1.

Fig. 6 is a sectional view ta keh on the line 6+6 of Fig. 2, and showing in plan the screen supporting means and several of the toothed cylinders of the cleaning chamber. the screen not being in positioh under the toothed cylinders in this View.

Fig. 7 is a detail view enlarged showing the cleaning chamber as viewed in Fig. 4 broken away to iliustra-te the first toothed cylinder and the yielding toothed breast in cross section.

Fig. 8 is a partialcross section throu' one of the toothed cylinders other than t e first to act on the cotton.

Fig. 9 is a detail View of one of the lifting cams for the screen.

Fig. 10 is a sectional View taken on the line 10 10 of Fig. 6.

Fig. 11 is a sectional view on the line 11-11 of Fig. 1-.

Fig. 12 is a rear end view of the cleaner casing.

Similar lefe'rence numerals refer to similar parts throughout the drawings.

In the embodiment of my invention illustrated, the cotton passes through the suction pipe 1 from any suitable source and under control of a \iaive 2 is deflected either he an upper passage 3 or a lower passage 4. When deflected to the lower passage it passes under a separating screen 5 and past an open valve 6 to an endless cotton distributor belt 7 'by means of which it is handled in the manner Well understood in this art and fed to the pipes 8 whence it, enters a cleaning and separating apparatus 1) and is delivered therefrom by a chute 10 to the gin 11. he lint is collected in the gin by a rotary brush from the saws 13 and is fed by blast from brush or fan through pipes 14 and 15 to the trarmping and baling ap pa i'atius (not shown).

The suction for inducing the flow of cotton through th s passages 1 and 4 is indmred by the fan 1'6 havin a main suction pipe 17 leading npwardiy t erefrom and entering through port 18 the chamber 19 in which the screen 5 is located. A valve 18 is located in the port 18 and provided with a suitable handle 18*. e apparatus as thus far described is that in common use and forms no part of my present invention, which concerns itself with the treatment; of the cotton that is deflected by means of the valve 2 into the upper passage 3. This pas sage extends-above the chamber 19 and enters the opening chamber :20 at its lower central This opening-chamber com prises an upri ht hem wall 21 and a sloping rear Wall 22 connected overhead by a top wall 23 which is spaced substantially above the in let opening of the passage 3. In the lower ce'ntiae'ted portion of the chamber 20 opposite the point of entrance of the cotton I arrange a rapidly rotating beater 24:, the detaiied construction of which will be understood by reference to Fig. 5, w ere it is shown as formed by a rotating shaft 25 mounted in suitable hearings in the end Walls of the chamber 20 and driven by an external pulley 26. Two series of beater blades 27 are mounted on the shaft, the blades preferably being flattened at one end and left round at the other ends so that they can be passed through holes drilled diametrically through the shaft. Two rows of lades thus profi'eeting' at each end from the shalt provide our longitudinal rows of bearers, the flattened blades being spaced and reverseiy inclined from the center of the shaft toward the sides of the ooehing ch-amher 20 so as to effect a proper lateral distribution of the cotton througl'iout the whole spacious '11 per portion of the opening' chamber Whic is much wider than the passage 3. The heater shaft is set slightly above the level of the shelf 27 over which the cotton flows fiorh the passage 3 before being enga ed by the beater blades. The heater is ro ated at a. high speed and the mass of entering cotton is thrown throughout the spacious o ening chamber 20 so that it is completel opened up, the cotton locks are separated ro'm each other and the sand, dirt and foreign matter being largely separatcd from the cotton. In other words, the cotton is put in condition to be most effectively freed from foreign matter by the main cleaning apparatus which will now be described.

The separated cotton pasess down the rear sloping wall 22 of the opening chamber into the cleaning chamber 29 through a bottom outlet 28. This chamber 29 is horizontally disposed, its upper portion being formed by removable sections having diagonal side joints which permit ready access to the toothed cleaning cylinders 30 and 31 which are mounted in the upper portion of the chamber with their axes lying preferably in a horizontal plane. Each toothed cylinder is mounted upon its respective shaft 32 which passes through suitable bean ings 33 therefor in the sides of the cleaning chamber and each of the shafts is driven by its respective pulley 34, all of which are disposed on the same side of the casing 29.

The cylinder 30 which acts upon the entering cotton has teeth 35 (see Fig. 7) which are made substantially heavier and stronger than the teeth 36 carried by the cylinders 31. The teeth 35 co-act with and pass between heavy teeth 37 which are mounted upon a breaker bar 38 pivotally mounted to swing from an overhead bolt 39 in the rear end wall 40 of the cleaner casing 29. The bottom edge of the breaker bar en a es a packing strip 41 on the seat 42 provi e therefor, the pack- I ing being adapted to permit the bar to be set at the desired adjustment relative to the cylinder 30. A bolt 43 is hinged to the bar and projects through an opening in the bracket 43. A coiled spring 44 surrounds the bolt between the bar 38 and the bracket and presses the bar to closed position. A hand wheel 44 and a wing nut 44 are screwed on the outer end of the bolt 43 beyond the bracket and by engaging the latter serve as a stop to limit the inward movement of the bar. The upper edge of the bar is rounded at 45 so as to maintain a tight joint with a. rubber strip 46. Similar rubber strips serve to seal the side joints between the bar and casing 29.

Below the several toothed cylinders is a screen bed 47 formed of vertical side boards cross connected and braced by bars 48. Between the bars 48 the top edge of these boards are cutaway to form four concave screen pockets 49, one under each of the toothed cylinders. The screen bed is nor mally supported in raised position on two pairs of cams 50 and 51 which are disposed under the sides of the 'bed. Thecams 51 are fast on a shaft 52 which extends across the lower portion of the cleaning casing 29 and is mounted to turn in suitable bearings 53. The cams 50, as shown in 10, are each mounted fast on its respective overhung bearing pin 54 mounted toturn in suitable hearings in the side walls of the casing 29. Fast on the outer end of each pin 54 without the casing is a crank 55. Each crank 55 is connected by a rod 56 to a similnr crank 55*, made fast on the adjacent end of the cam shaft 52, and one of these cranks 55 is connected by a bar 56 to an operating handle 57 which in turn is pivoted to a bracket 57 on the easing 29, and by means of which all four cams can be moved in unison to raise or lower the screen bed. A stop 58 when engaged by a crank 55 serves to limit the lifting movement of the cams as they act to raise the screen bed and a bolt 58 serves to lock the handle 57 in position with the screen bed raised. The rear end wall 59 of the screen bed, as seen in Fig. 7,

has a cross batten 60 connected thereto and carrying several rotatable catches 61 which are adapted to engage the upper edge of the rear sloping hop or wall 62 and support it with its lower ec ge bearing against a stop 63 (see Fig, l) on the bottom of the cleaning chamber at the rear edge of the opening 64 therein. The fixed sloping front wall 65 with the wall 62 and the side walls of the cleanin casing 29 form a hopper under the screen which receives the foreign matter separated from the cotton and delivers same to a dust separator 66. The rear wall of the casing 29 is provided with a door 67 hinged and adapted to open outwardly and upwardly and through this door access is bad to release the catches 61 so that the hopper bot-tom wall 62 will drop to the floor of the casing 29, its side walls being notched to pass the pins 54 and cams 50. The several cams can now be turned by lever 57 to lower the screen bed, 47 into position to be drawn out through the door 67 in the manner shown in Fig. 2. In order to facilitate the easy handling of the screen bed, the cams 50, as shown in Fig. 9, have rollers 68 mounted to rotate in sockets 69 from which the periphery of the roller projects. The rollers are located in such position that when the cam is in lowered position (see Figs. 2 and 10), the bottom edge of the sides of the screen bed will ride on the rollers and thus can be easily shifted into and out of the cleaning casing.

In order to feed the cotton through the passage 3 and opening chamber so that it falls between the cylinder 30 and breaker bar 31, I provide a branch pipe connection 70 leading from the main suction pipe 17 and connected to the upper portion of the return flue 71 in the dust box 66 formed by a transverse vertical wall or partition 72. This partition stands above a hopper 73 having its bottom discharge normally closed by a rotating vacuum valve and ejector 74 which serves the double purpose of pro-- serving the vacuum and discharging the foreign matter as it collects in its pockets into the discharge pipe 75, which is open to the atmosphere. A valve 76 suction pipe 70.

The cleaning casing 29 has at its forward end an opening 77 through which the cleaned cotton enters the passage 4 above the distri'buter 7. This opening 77 is controlled by the valve 6. As seen in Fig. 3, the valves 2 and 6 are coordinated so that when the valve 2 is lowered to divert cotton through passage and the cleaner, the valve (1 is raised to engage a seat 78 in the passage 4, in which position it permits the clean cotton to return from the cleaner through the opening 77 and fall on the distributor 7 and at the same time valves off the overhead suction in pipe 4: to prevent it interferin with the delivery of the cotton to the distributor. As seen in Fig. 11 the distributor is formed by an endless belt moving in an elongated casing 7, the upper flight of the belt passing over a horizontal wall 7" which forms a partition extending short of the ends of the casing T. The upper flight of the distributer belt passes over this partition 7" and at intervals curries flexible valve strips 7 so spaced that several of them will be moving in contacl with the top wall of the casing 7 on each side of the port 77. thereby preventing the vacuum being broken to the cleaning chamber through the port 77 when open.

The means for coordinating the valves 2 and U comprise a crank arm 79 rigid with the valve 2 and recessed longitudinally to form a slide seat for a slotted arm 80 which is held in proper adjusted position therein by bolts 81 and is pivotally connected to a rod 82, the free end of which is screwed into an arm 83 pivoted on a sector gear 84 rigidly connected to the valve 6. A Worm gear 85 is mounted in suitable bearilws S6 and adapted to be turned by a shaft 8% extending downwardly to a point Where the crank 88 thereon can be operated from the gin floor. The sliding connection between the parts 79 and 80 permits all necessary adj ustnient to make the valves seat properly in both of their operating positions.

The cleaning cylinders 30 and 31 are all caused to rotate in the same direction indicated by arrows in Fig. 1, this 'beingacconiplished as shown in Fig. 4, by the manner in which an endless driving belt 89 is caused to pass around their respective driving pulleys 3% and about the idler pulleys 90, 91 and 92. A pulley 93 (see Fig. 2) on the shaft of the cylinder 30 constitutes the main driving pul'ley being driven by a belt 94. A pulley 95 on the shaft of the forward cylinder 31 serves, b means of a belt 96, to drive the pulley 26 ibr the beater.

The several cylinders 30 and 31 are formed by a plurality of toothed castings comprising curved narrow base strips 97 is provided in the (see Figs. 7 and 8) which extend the length of the cylinder and are connected thereto by bolts aaeach' best carrying along one edge a raised flan e 99 adapted to overlap the side edg of the next adjacent base strip. The teeth 35 or 36 are cast integral with these bases and the holes for the securing bolts are arranged so as to not interfere with the staggered disposition of the teeth of the several rows on the cylinder.

In operation, as the cotton enters the openingchainber 20 it is opened up by the heaters 24 and the loreign matter partly separated therefrom. The cotton and foreign matter Work down the incline wall 22 responsive to the suction draft through pipe and Fall between the teeth 35 and 37. These teeth are so shaped and disposed that the cotton will pass freely between them but sticks or trash will be ground up between the teeth. When pieces of metal are encountered, the beveled character of the teeth and the yieldii'ig breaker-bar 38 will permit the article to pass without serious damage. The cotton and foreign matter is whipped over the screen by the cylinder 30 While subjected to a strong down draft and most of the foreign matter is separated at this first operation so that in a comparatively clean state the cotton is caught and passed again and again over the screen bed by the cylinders 31 to make certain that it has been tl'iorongl'rly cleaned before it passes through the opening 77 to the distri'buter 7. The light clean cotton will have a tendency to float through the cleaning cliaanber and be distributed to the several cleaning cylinders; the distance traveled being proportionate to its relative lightness, and it. therefore, will not necessarily be passed between the first cylinder and the breaker-bar but all foreign matter and dirty cotton which is made heavy thereby will be caught by the cylinders 30 and passed over the whole screen. All foreign matter cleaned from the cotton passes with the suction draft downwardly through the hopper below the screen to the dust separator through which it passes With a centrifugal whirl: under the partition 72 so that the heavier foreign matter will be separated from the air which passes to the pipe 70 while the separated matter falls into the pockets of the ejector 74. To clean or inspect the screen, I open the rear door 67, releasethe catches 61 permitting the hopper wall 62 to drop and move the handle 57 to lower the screen bed by its supporting cams until in position to be drawn out of the door on its roller su pbrts 68. The ma'n ner of construction of t e sectional cylinders makes them bothdust and air proof.

The apparatus is provided at suitable points with doors and windows giving 0ppm'tunity of access and inspection at the points needed. When the cleaner is to be cut out oi service, the crank 88 is manipulated to reverse the posit-ions of the valves rah '2 and 6; raisin 'ber,hieanstb feed cotton t emon? the former to its dotted line position in or or to close the intake and of the passage 3 and lowering to tightly close the. ort 77 into the clelining chamber. valve 76 is'closed, whereupon thefeed: of cotton to the distributor 7 takes place in the ordinary manner.

It is understood that the construction illustrated is merely exe" iiplary of the, rinci'ples 'of-constructlon an 0 ration o my present invention and, there ore, it may be varied tosuitdifl'erent operatin conditions within the scope and meaning 6 the followin claims.

' aving thus described my invention; what I claim as new and desire teseeure by Letters 11 In af'cott'on cleaner,a cotton opening chamber having an outlet for the opened cotton in'its'loyver portion, means to feedthe cotton to said chamber, and a. fast spinning beater therein to receive "smdforcibl'y throw the entering'cotton u flwardly with" a substantial free flight t roughjthe spacious upper portion of the chamber to separate and open up the cotton locks and free heavier foreign matter therefrom.

2. In a cotton cleaner, a cotton opening chamberenlarged overhead and intermediate cotton inlet aiid a, contracted bottom ootton "outlet, suction feed means tending to pass cotton dimu n-em said inlet to said outlet through said opening chamber, a fast spinning intercept the forcibly upwardly out of the current, and means to direct t e falling ootton in said chamber to said outlet, substan-'- tially as described. p y

3. In acotton cleaner, .a cotton opening chamber enlarged overheadand having an intermediate cotton inlet'and a bottom cotton outlet, suction feed means to pass cotton through said opening chamber, a fastspin nin-g beater dispds'edin the of thGBhter ing cotton and adapted to ock it foroibly upwardly out offthe path of the air ee -rent,

and against "the walls'of the enlarged over S direct the" head chamber and mea U falling cotton in said rhber pastysaid beater to saidi dischar opemn said chain'berbein substantia 1y Wldm t an the 1 inlet and sad blades adapted to upwardly its flight substantially uniformly throughout the enlarged upper portion of the chamber.

4:. In a cotton cleaner,

knock the cotton both 11 opening chamer'eto, a fast sp nbeater element 'the -einjedapted to and drive'it for nin receive the entering cotton cibly' against the up 0 which are suflicient y spaced from said elethe latter valve The valve 18is opened and the 1 beater in the iower po having an beater disposed to entering cotton and knock it ath ofthe air beater eompfising deflectin and laterally to distribute it in p a suction outlet passage "lead or walls ofsiid ment to provide asulostantial free flight for the cotton, and cleanin mechanism into which the cotton is'fed gr chamber, substanti ally as described,"

5. In a cotton cleaner, an opening cham bet having a contracted lower portion, means to feed cotton thereto, afast spinning beater workingin said lower portion and adapted toreoeive the entering cotton'and' drive it forcibly against the upper walls of said chamber which aire suifieienu "spaced fromsaid element to provide a su tanti'al free flight for the cotton, and cleaning mechanism into which the cotton and the foreigh matter freed. therefrom is fed from said opening chamber, scribed)" 6. In a cotton cleaner, an openin berenlarged overhead, means to cotton theret o 'in a mass,

ion of said chamber adapted to receive and throw the (button upweirdly througitthe spacious upper portion of said chamber; there be'in a bottom outlet from the chamber from w ich the opened cotton passes and acleanin mechanism to separate the'ioreign matter tom the opened cotton, substantially as described.

7. In a cotton cleaner, casing comprising a plura toothed cyl hiders and screening 7 an overhead cotton opening c amber from which the cotton'passes to the cleaner casing, said opening chamber having a hopper bottom andbeing enlargedoverhead,and a relachant a main cleaner lityof rotatable 0111 said opening eed they a fast spinnirig" '85 p s thereunder,

tively small fast spinning beater disposed in fastspinning beaterto strike the cotton en tering said lower "portion and throw it throu h thes acious upper portion of said chwm r', an; a cleaning apparatus into which the openedeotton passes from said. chamber, bstantially'; as described.

'9. In a cottonicleaner, a' suction feed passage for the cotton, 11; cotton opening chamher into whichsaid opens, a cleaning chamber-below an coinmunicating at one end with "*the opening ehainber, a rotary beazter working 1n? theopening chamber to open u theniass of entering cotton, rotating toothed cylinders workin in thecleaningchamber, work,an-oi1tlet for the cleaned cotton, and

ing from=below the screening1 in said cleaning 1 initial cylin er only being sposecl in the screening over-w ich saidcylinders chamber, the K direct line of tlre draft through the ,clcarn ing Ql'lalllhdl', snbstantiallyus described.

1,0, In a cott n, deeper, a casing, a rotw table cleaner t erein, e screen, for the aner re wseb uPnQrt-s for t e cr and a door in the casing to]; the withdrawal, bodily of the screen.

11. In a cotton cleaner, e casing, a, rotutable cleaning element, a. concave screen over which said cleaning element forces the cotton, adjustable supports iior the SQEQBI}, and

a door in the casing for the removal of the screen when ad usted to, n predetermin d position.

12. n a, co ton, leane a c n ng chamher, a series o rotating toothed cylinders working therein, a screen bed below said yl nders ca ry ng concave screen pockets nde he y inders, mean o a jst a ed toward and from the cylinders, and an outlet door for the removal of the screen bed when lowered to clear the cylinders.

13. I a, cotton l an r, a lea g h mher, a series of rotating toothed cylinders working therein, a screen bed below said cylinders carrying concave screen pockets under the cylin, ers, means to adjust said bed toward and, from the cylinders, an outlet door for the removal of the bed when disposed to clear the cylinders, and a hopper e ow a d creen bed mp i ng a Wallmovable o per it the r moval 91 he dlt n a otton cl ane a lean g chamber, a, plurality of rotating toothed cylinders therein, a screen bed having con- Gave screen pockets which fit under the cylinders, a hopper wall detachably connected to one end of the screen bed and inclined toward an outlet port in the bottom. of said chamber, mechanism to raise and lower the screen bed, and a door for the removal of the screen bed in its lower position.

15. In a cotton cleaner, rotatable toothed elements, screening below the elements, cams forming the supports for said screening, and mec anism to move the cams to adgust the screening toward and from the rotatable elements, substantially as described.

16. In a cotton cleaner, rotatable toothed elements, a screen bed below the elements, cams forming the supports for said: bed, mechanism o move the cams together t adjust the bed bodily toward and ilrom sald lem n and means to l mit the ad ustment of said bed toward the rotatable elements.

17- In a cotton cleaner, rotatable too ed elements, a screen bed elow the elements, cams wholly supporting said ed, me hani m to. move the cams in unison to raise the bed, means to limit the adjustment of and bed toward the rotatable elements, and means to lock the cams with the bed in raised; positlon.

18. In a cotton cleaner comprising a plin'nlity ot' tooilicilclcnncr clcownts, a, removable sliding screen bed disposed under said elements, cams forming slides and adjustable supports for said bed in its operating position, and means for operating the cams in unison to adjust the bed toward suirl toothed elements, substantially as described.

19. I11 a cotton cleaner, a plurality of toothed elements, concave screening under said elements, a movable bed carrying said screening, cams adjustably supporting said bod, means connecting the. cams for joint operation, said means comprising a shaft extending through the cleaner and carrying the cums near one end thereof, overhung bearings in the sides of the casing carrying the cams at the other end of the casing,

means to connect all the cams for joint manip iation, an inclined false bottom in the chamber detaclrably connected at one end of the screen bed and adapted when dotached to fell clear of said overhung coin bearings, and u door for the removal of the lowered screen bed.

20. In n cotton cleaner, a rotatable toothed cleaning clement therein, a screen below said means, cams for adjusting said screen, antifriction rollers carried by said cams and adapted to sup aort the screen in its lowered position, and a door for the removal of the screen, substantially as described.

21. In combination, a suction feed mechanism for cotton gins comprising a conveyer passage, a by-pass lead' g from and returning to said passage, valves for both ends of said layass, ad ustable operating mechanism to simultaneously open or close both ends of said by-pass, and cotton cleaning mechanism in said by-pnss.

22. In combination, a suction feed pipe For cotton, Van opening chamber through which the cotton first enters, mechanism therein to open up the cotton, a cotton cleaning mechanism communicating at one end with the opening chamber, a screen partition in said cleaning apparatus, rotatable toothed elements working over said screen, a hopper below the screen. a dust separator into which seid hopper discharges, a suction pipe connected to the dust separator and acting to induce an air current from the opening, chamber through the adjacent an of the partition into the hopper, and a, cotton feeder which receives the cot ton from said cleaningspparatus, said cotton feeder comprising means to prevent the breaking of the vacuum in said cleaning apparatus, substantially as described.

'23, Ln a cotton cleaner, a. rotatable toothed cylinder, acleaner casing in which the cylinden rotates, a breaker berhin edly m un ed in the co i e pposite the cyfindfir nd arrying heavy metallic teeth, spring means mounted. on the casing and yieldably holding the breaker-bar in cooperative relationship with said toothed cylinder, and suction means to draw the cotton between said bar and cylinder.

24. In a cleaner casing having a rotatable toothed element mounted therein, a breakerbar hingedly mounted in an opening in the casing, means to pack the joint between the breaker-bar and easing, a spring, means to mount said spring on the casing in position to engage the free end of the breaker-bar and urge it to closed osition in said casing, teeth on the breakerar co-acting with the teeth on said rotatable toothed element, and suction means to 'draw the cotton directly between the teeth of said bar and element.

25. In a cotton cleaner, a cleaning chamber having a cotton inlet at one end and a cotton outlet at the other end, a series of rotatable toothed members mounted in said chamber and substantially spaced from the top thereof, screening under said toothed members, and means to produce a direct air draft downwardly from the cotton inlet past the first toothed member and through the screening, leaving the space above the other toothed members in said chamber normally free from forcible down drafts, sub-- stantially as described.

26. In a cotton cleaner, a main cleaner casing comprising a plurality of toothed elements and a screen over which they successively pass the cotton, in combination with a cotton openin chamber disposed above and communicating at one end with said cleaning chamber, suction feed means to introduce cotton into the lower portion of said cleaning chamber, and means to cause the suction draft to pass down through the cleaning chamber, said opening chamber being enlarged overhead and having a straight inclined outer wall sloping toward the point of communication with the main cleaner casing, and a fast spinning beater disposed in the path of the entering cotton and rotatable in a direction to engage and throw it forcibly through the enlarged upper portion of the cleaner chamber.

27. In a cotton cleaning mechanism, an opening chamber, a cotton induction port of substantially less width than the opening chamber, means to feed cotton through said port, and a fast spinning beater disposed to receive the cotton and throw it forcibly through the opening chamber, said beater comprising flattened blades inclined in opposite directions from the center line of the entering cotton toward each end of the opening chamber, substantially as described.

28. In a cotton opener, an opening chamber enlarged overhead and having a relatively narrow cotton inlet passage, a fast spinning beater opposite said passage and comprising a heater shaft, and a plurality of beater blades, each blade having one end rounded and inserted through the shaft and the opposite end flattened, the flattened ends of the beater blades being inclined in opposite directions from the center line of the entering cotton.

29. The combination with a main cleaning chamber having a series of toothed elements rotatable therein, a screen bed under said elements, a cotton feeder adapted to preserve the vacuum and connnunicating with the discharge end of said cleaning chamber, suction feed means to introduce the cotton at the opposite end of said cleaning chamber, a suction passage leading from below the screen bed in said chamber, and means interposed in the suction feed line to said chamber to fully open the cotton, the top wall of the cleaner chamber being spaced substantially above rotatable cleaning elc ments therein to afford ample space for the lighter cotton to float therethrough, the initial cleaning element being a toothed cylinder disposed in the direct line of the suction through the cleaning chamber.

In testimony whereof I affix my signature.

ROBERT S. MUNGER.

Witness NoMm WELSH.

Copies 01 this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents,

I Washington, D. 0. 

